Let’s say I have a struct Event
which implements the method permalink
:
struct Event {
base_url: String,
rel_permalink: String,
permalink: String,
title: String,
}
impl Event {
fn permalink(&self) -> String {
let permalink = format!("{}{}", self.base_url, self.rel_permalink);
permalink
}
}
The method takes 2 fields of the struct and the target would be to return the definition of another field.
Later I instantiate an event1: Event
:
let event1 = Event {
base_url: base_url,
rel_permalink: rel_permalink.to_string(),
title: node.value().name().to_string(),
permalink = permalink(),
};
Essentially I would like the field permalink
to be the value returned by the method permalink
, is something like this possible, is this correct?
I couldn’t find something similar in the docs…
Pheraps using an associated function as constructor would be a better way to handle a similar situation?
Thank you so much!
It’s quite simple. Just remove the
permalink
field! If you are calculating it then no need to store it in the struct.If you do need the field to be there (ex you serialise it with serde), then create a method called
new
that takes everything but the permalink, construct your permalink there, then return a new object.Your permalink method can now just be
self.permalink.to_string()
P.S. in the second case I’d recommend to change the return type of
self.permalink()
to. It avoids unnecessary cloning of the string.
It’s quite simple. Just remove the permalink field! If you are calculating it then no need to store it in the struct.
This is inefficient. It should be the other way around. Remove
base_url
andrel_permalink
, and storepermalink
and therel_permalink
offset.That way, you can get a zero cost
for any of the three.
Technically yes, but a newbie doesn’t need that. I doubt it’s an application that performance is so critical either.
Too much premature optimisation IMO
Hmm, yeah, I’d use a constructor method:
impl Event { pub fn new(base_url: String, rel_permalink: String, title: String) -> Self { let permalink = format!("{}{}", self.base_url, self.rel_permalink); Self { base_url, rel_permalink, title, permalink, }; } // ... }
Then you’d instantiate it like so:
let title = node.value().name().to_string(); let event = Event::new(base_url, rel_permalink.to_string(), title);
Is it really valid to callpermalink()
in that context, since it requires? There’s no
self
in that context afaik. Can’t test it now but it looks suspiciousEDIT: Invalid since the comment was updated
Sorry, I posted the comment, then realized that problem. 😅